Tony Fernandes, the Queens Park Rangers chairman, has said that no job is safe at Loftus Road – including his own.

The Malaysian businessman took over at Loftus Road in August and provided the financial clout for Neil Warnock to bring in a host of players. But reports on Thursday suggested Fernandes was ready to block such spending this January due to reservations over whether Warnock is the right person to be QPR manager.

The AirAsia chief executive on tweeted on Friday to tell fans to ignore the speculation, although he did admit only success will keep people in their job.

"Guys at QPR, there is no freeze of cash. Don't listen to ambiguous press reports," he wrote on Twitter. "We are disappointed where we are in the league. But we continue to develop and along the way hard decisions need to be made. But we never stop moving. Never.

"This is a journey not a sprint. Along the way we learn. It's important to note no one job is safe. Results are key.

"If I don't deliver I would be the first to step down as chairman.

"We owe it to all the fans. Good money is paid and results are key.

"I will leave no stone unturned to make QPR a success. But if I fail I have to go. I will give it 150 percent effort."